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#21
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![]() RedAspect wrote: "DaveyWavey" wrote in message ups.com... So here's a question - does anyone (strikers included) know why the RMT are holding these strikes? It seems that even the strikers themselves can't get their story straight. From reading the various reports (i.e. statements from the RMT leadership, London Underground, and news reports), it seems to me that events have unfolded as follows... First the RMT leadership claimed that the strike was over the shorter working week deal. Of course, this didn't last long when everyone realised that the RMT agreed this deal ages ago. Then the RMT leadership did a complete u-turn, claiming that the strike was never about this deal, mumbling something about "sneaky job-cuts" instead. They couldn't really explain what job cuts they were referring to, and London Underground confirmed that there were no such cuts. So, of course, the RMT leadership then fell back into some vague and undefined statement about safety, despite London Underground's confirmations that the new rosters had been validated on safety grounds. Because their grounds for striking were so blatantly incoherent, they refused to even enter discussions. This pretty much told the public what they needed to know about the RMT leadership's motivations, an impression that was underlined by the refusal of many RMT members to support this absurd action on New Year's Eve. Following the RMT leadership's failure to co-erce their membership into this unjustified strike, they are now determined to try and save face by scheduling a further strike. This time, they seem to be protesting at dubious "safety issues" caused by the failed New Year's Eve strike. Fairly absurd really, given that any such safety issues (and there is not much evidence that there actually were any) would have been a direct result of the strike action in the first place. To further underline the lack of coherence behind the reasons for these strikes, I should draw your attention to the following article, authored by RMT strike supporters: http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/art...rticle_id=8040 In this article, they claim the following reasons for strike: - Some Transport for London staff apparently earn quite a decent wage. - The Queen didn't award an MBE to every single RMT member working at King's Cross. Hardly conclusive justification for a strike, is it? And it doesn't really line up that well with the spin that the RMT leadership are desperately trying to create about why these strikes are occurring. Ultimately, Bob Crow and his cronies are letting the decent hardworking RMT membership down with this charade of misrepresentation. But he's not fooling anyone. My post on The Transport Forum sums it and I hope explains why this is just as important for the public as it is for the station staff. I reproduce it he "Great Stuff a lively discussion so let's clarify a few things. The strike is about jobs and safety. The level of staff at central London stations was set in law as a result of the Kings Cross fire. LU wants to scrap that legislation known as section 12. The 35-hour week that was first promised in 1997 was negotiated with LU last year and it was agreed that 200 ticket seller posts would go but no job losses. To try and do this without employing more staff, LU put forward the 35/37.5 hour week. The excess 2.5 hours per week being taken as extra leave. The figures don't add up of course, you cannot run the tube with the same amount of staff when they off with a total of 52 days leave (including normal annual leave and bank holidays). I was one who voted against the deal because a few others and I could see the flaws. Customer driven rostering as LU calls it, is a back door way of reducing staff. The new rosters prove us right, and LU is seeking to cut nearly 500 jobs despite Mike Brown's denials. If the KC fire proved that the present level of staff was required how can this be right we now have the terrorist threat as well? Actually because of the smoking ban, improvements in station design and station operation (read staff and staff procedures) a fire like KC is unlikely. But who knows when terrorists will visit again. We must win this dispute. Unfortunately the only way workers can win these things is by withdrawing their labour. Inconvenience to customers is regrettable but necessary." Well, you are correct that *some* of the strike supporters are claiming the strikes are about jobs and safety, albeit supported with fairly tenuous arguments. But, we can also see that some strike supporters think the strikes are about a lack of medals being awarded by the Queen, or about the supposedly high wages being paid to TFL staff. So, I'll stand by my original point that the public justification for these strikes is somewhat incoherent (or, at best, inconsistent). A fact that seems to be borne out by the apparent low participation in the strike action (both on NYE and today). |
#22
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In article .com,
Chris! wrote: LU wants to scrap that legislation known as section 12. Section 12 of what? Can you provide a link to it? All recent legislation is on http://www.hmso.gov.uk From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kings_Cross_fire } The Fennell Investigation into the fire prompted the introduction } of the Fire Precautions (Sub-surface Railway Stations) Regulations } 1989 (usually referred to as the Section 12 Regulations because } they were introduced under section 12 of the 1971 Fire Precautions } Act). FWIW: the relevant regulations are online at hmso.gov.uk; it's Statutory Instrument 1989 No. 1401. -- RIP Morph (1977-2005) |
#23
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I don't condone the strike for one moment.
But, unless and until ticket machines can, for example, at Fulham Broadway, sell me a return from Zone 2 boundary to Harwich, then the machines are not covering all of the complicated eventualities that, at present, require a ticket office. I frequently buy a Zone 1 & 2 Travelcard at my newsagent, but often need an extension as aforementioned which, at present, machines cannot cope with, especially if it invoves National Rail. Why can't the ticket office staff being redeployed (presumably outside peak hours) be equipped with portable machines like National Rail travelling ticket inspectors who seem to be able to sell any combination of tickets on their portable machines for any date up to 364 days in advance, and accept credit cards as well? Presumably they would howl with resentment at, a) being removed from their cosy ticket office and b) having the additional duties of carrying equipment and dealing with the public but, frankly, so what? We all have aspects of our jobs we don't like, and some of us don't even get guaranteed pensions and paid leave etc. Marc. |
#24
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On Mon, 9 Jan 2006 02:58:29 -0000, "RedAspect"
wrote: The strike is about jobs and safety. The level of staff at central London stations was set in law as a result of the Kings Cross fire. LU wants to scrap that legislation known as section 12. Sorry but I understood that the legislative change was a government change and not something sponsored by LU. I have seen nothing that would suggest that LU is promoting this change. The 35-hour week that was first promised in 1997 was negotiated with LU last year and it was agreed that 200 ticket seller posts would go but no job losses. Where is the evidence - not rhetoric - that there will be job losses? To try and do this without employing more staff, LU put forward the 35/37.5 hour week. The excess 2.5 hours per week being taken as extra leave. The figures don't add up of course, you cannot run the tube with the same amount of staff when they off with a total of 52 days leave (including normal annual leave and bank holidays). There is no such thing as a free lunch. I was one who voted against the deal because a few others and I could see the flaws. Customer driven rostering as LU calls it, is a back door way of reducing staff. Perhaps you need to take over from the Bob and Bobby show then? The new rosters prove us right, and LU is seeking to cut nearly 500 jobs despite Mike Brown's denials. If the KC fire proved that the present level of staff was required how can this be right we now have the terrorist threat as well? Actually because of the smoking ban, improvements in station design and station operation (read staff and staff procedures) a fire like KC is unlikely. But who knows when terrorists will visit again. Without diminishing for one moment what staff did after the incidents I do not see the moral basis for using the threat of terrorist attack as a way of justifying the retention of staff in ticket offices or for strike action. No member of staff was able, in any practical sense, to prevent the suicide attacks. It would be utterly wrong to make the accusation that they could have done - that would simply heap guilt on peoples' shoulders. It is wrong for the RMT to suggest that retention of current staffing arrangements would in any way prevent an attack. They could happen tomorrow in exactly the same circumstances as it is utterly impractical and, dare I say dangerous, for LU staff to physically inspect every piece of luggage before it enters the LU network. We must win this dispute. Unfortunately the only way workers can win these things is by withdrawing their labour. Inconvenience to customers is regrettable but necessary." Regrettable but necessary. Don't make me laugh. The RMT are only looking after the (apparent) interests of their members. This is nothing to do with passengers and everything to do with being out negotiated and trying to correct a mess they created when they accepted the original deal. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#25
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On 9 Jan 2006 06:57:14 -0800, "Jonathan Morris"
wrote: Oyster cards are excellent, although I accept that technically they're regarded as proprietary, and as such there are a lot of issues/concerns with the TOCs about their use. Could you try that again in English please? |
#26
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Laurence Payne wrote:
Oyster cards are excellent, although I accept that technically they're regarded as proprietary, and as such there are a lot of issues/concerns with the TOCs about their use. Could you try that again in English please?\ It was. What could you not understand from the above text? To clarify; the cards apparently aren't 'industry standard' and as such are seen as proprietary. This can cause problems in the future, with other examples being the Countdown system used on the buses. Great to begin with, and be one of the first, but very quickly it's obsolete and incompatible with new technology. TOCs have expressed concerns about Oyster, although there are perhaps many other reasons for not taking Oyster on - and some may well be due to their peceived losses in revenue. I don't claim to know what all these issues are. Finally, I think they're excellent. Hence me saying that from the outset. Is that clear now? Jonathan |
#28
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![]() "Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... On Mon, 9 Jan 2006 02:58:29 -0000, "RedAspect" wrote: The strike is about jobs and safety. The level of staff at central London stations was set in law as a result of the Kings Cross fire. LU wants to scrap that legislation known as section 12. Sorry but I understood that the legislative change was a government change and not something sponsored by LU. I have seen nothing that would suggest that LU is promoting this change. The 35-hour week that was first promised in 1997 was negotiated with LU last year and it was agreed that 200 ticket seller posts would go but no job losses. Where is the evidence - not rhetoric - that there will be job losses? To try and do this without employing more staff, LU put forward the 35/37.5 hour week. The excess 2.5 hours per week being taken as extra leave. The figures don't add up of course, you cannot run the tube with the same amount of staff when they off with a total of 52 days leave (including normal annual leave and bank holidays). There is no such thing as a free lunch. I was one who voted against the deal because a few others and I could see the flaws. Customer driven rostering as LU calls it, is a back door way of reducing staff. Perhaps you need to take over from the Bob and Bobby show then? The new rosters prove us right, and LU is seeking to cut nearly 500 jobs despite Mike Brown's denials. If the KC fire proved that the present level of staff was required how can this be right we now have the terrorist threat as well? Actually because of the smoking ban, improvements in station design and station operation (read staff and staff procedures) a fire like KC is unlikely. But who knows when terrorists will visit again. Without diminishing for one moment what staff did after the incidents I do not see the moral basis for using the threat of terrorist attack as a way of justifying the retention of staff in ticket offices or for strike action. No member of staff was able, in any practical sense, to prevent the suicide attacks. It would be utterly wrong to make the accusation that they could have done - that would simply heap guilt on peoples' shoulders. It is wrong for the RMT to suggest that retention of current staffing arrangements would in any way prevent an attack. They could happen tomorrow in exactly the same circumstances as it is utterly impractical and, dare I say dangerous, for LU staff to physically inspect every piece of luggage before it enters the LU network. We must win this dispute. Unfortunately the only way workers can win these things is by withdrawing their labour. Inconvenience to customers is regrettable but necessary." Regrettable but necessary. Don't make me laugh. The RMT are only looking after the (apparent) interests of their members. This is nothing to do with passengers and everything to do with being out negotiated and trying to correct a mess they created when they accepted the original deal. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! Both the uninformed and the anti RMT mob in this NG are just refusing to see that the strike is about job losses and safety. To include the awarding of "Me Before Everybody" (MBE) to a manager that didn't earn it is just the kind of non sequitur thrown in by losers who haven't really got anything to say. |
#29
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Of course, RMT members could NEVER be accused of deserving an MBE (Me
Before Everybody), could they?! Those selfless souls are striking purely altruistically for the benefit of the travelling public and if, perchance, they were offered a £1 million redundancy package they would decline it as immoral and highly offensive to those not so rewarded. Marc. |
#30
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![]() RedAspect wrote: "Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... On Mon, 9 Jan 2006 02:58:29 -0000, "RedAspect" wrote: The strike is about jobs and safety. The level of staff at central London stations was set in law as a result of the Kings Cross fire. LU wants to scrap that legislation known as section 12. Sorry but I understood that the legislative change was a government change and not something sponsored by LU. I have seen nothing that would suggest that LU is promoting this change. The 35-hour week that was first promised in 1997 was negotiated with LU last year and it was agreed that 200 ticket seller posts would go but no job losses. Where is the evidence - not rhetoric - that there will be job losses? To try and do this without employing more staff, LU put forward the 35/37.5 hour week. The excess 2.5 hours per week being taken as extra leave. The figures don't add up of course, you cannot run the tube with the same amount of staff when they off with a total of 52 days leave (including normal annual leave and bank holidays). There is no such thing as a free lunch. I was one who voted against the deal because a few others and I could see the flaws. Customer driven rostering as LU calls it, is a back door way of reducing staff. Perhaps you need to take over from the Bob and Bobby show then? The new rosters prove us right, and LU is seeking to cut nearly 500 jobs despite Mike Brown's denials. If the KC fire proved that the present level of staff was required how can this be right we now have the terrorist threat as well? Actually because of the smoking ban, improvements in station design and station operation (read staff and staff procedures) a fire like KC is unlikely. But who knows when terrorists will visit again. Without diminishing for one moment what staff did after the incidents I do not see the moral basis for using the threat of terrorist attack as a way of justifying the retention of staff in ticket offices or for strike action. No member of staff was able, in any practical sense, to prevent the suicide attacks. It would be utterly wrong to make the accusation that they could have done - that would simply heap guilt on peoples' shoulders. It is wrong for the RMT to suggest that retention of current staffing arrangements would in any way prevent an attack. They could happen tomorrow in exactly the same circumstances as it is utterly impractical and, dare I say dangerous, for LU staff to physically inspect every piece of luggage before it enters the LU network. We must win this dispute. Unfortunately the only way workers can win these things is by withdrawing their labour. Inconvenience to customers is regrettable but necessary." Regrettable but necessary. Don't make me laugh. The RMT are only looking after the (apparent) interests of their members. This is nothing to do with passengers and everything to do with being out negotiated and trying to correct a mess they created when they accepted the original deal. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! Both the uninformed and the anti RMT mob in this NG are just refusing to see that the strike is about job losses and safety. To include the awarding of "Me Before Everybody" (MBE) to a manager that didn't earn it is just the kind of non sequitur thrown in by losers who haven't really got anything to say. What are you trying to say? 1. There is an article about "MBEs" on the socialist worker website authored by a person of the same name as the one who leases the domain name you keep spamming here 2. You now reckon the strike is about job losses and safety. 3. Your argument about safety and job losses was proved foundless by Paul C. 4. You try to destroy his argument by criticising people who talk about MBEs Paul didn't mention MBEs in his post (the one you reply to), it is in an article which is believed to originate from you. |
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